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Thursday
Dec022021

Doc Corner: 138 titles qualify for Best Documentary Feature

By Glenn Dunks

The Academy has released the longlist of titles in competition for the Best Documentary Feature category. The number is 138, a significant reduction from previous years that were well over the 200 mark. According to The Wrap, it is the lowest number since 2015. That certainly makes our job easier as well as that of the Academy’s documentary branch members who now have to get this down to a list 15 before the final five are announced on nomination morning.

Why is the number so much lower? Well, there are three good reasons for that... 

  1. There’s still a pandemic happening, so fewer documentaries have been made let alone released.
  2. The eligibility year is also shorter given those first few months of 2021 don’t count.
  3. A new Emmy rule states that any film on the Academy’s viewing portal cannot then qualify for the television academy’s awards so if producers make this choice now they can't unmake it.

The full list, links to reviews, thoughts and other musings after the jump…

Click to read more ...

Wednesday
Dec012021

Through Her Lens: 2018 (The 91st Oscars)

A series by Juan Carlos Ojano 
Previously: Episode 1 - 2020-21 / Episode 2 - 2019 

Eyes were on the Best Director category at the 91st Academy Awards after Greta Gerwig became only the fifth woman to be nominated in the said category the previous year. Contemporaneous articles expressed disappointment with this fact, but this Oscar year was also plagued with other issues: no ceremony host, plans to give out awards during commercial break, and divisive films like Green Book, Bohemian Rhapsody, and Vice being major factors, too.

In a way, these other controversies clouded what could have been a more extensive discussion regarding representation in the Best Director category. Out of the 347 films included in the Reminder List of Eligible Films in 2018 (91st Academy Awards), 62 of them (or 17.9%) were directed/co-directed by women.

OSCAR-NOMINATED FEMALE-DIRECTED FILMS (in alphabetical order): Animal Behaviour*, Bao*, Can You Ever Forgive Me?, Capernaum, Free Solo, Late Afternoon*, Marguerite*, Mary Queen of Scots,  Period. End of Sentence.*, and RBG. (*not in the eligibility list for Best Picture)

OUR ALTERNATIVE SET OF FIVE...

Click to read more ...

Wednesday
Dec012021

Magic Mike's Last Link

• Stabroek News "Not a King but a Queenmaker" interesting take on King Richard
• Thrillist Esther Zuckerman talks to Paul Thomas Anderson about shooting a key scene in Licorice Pizza inside her childhood home
Deadline Penelope Cruz teaming with Pedro's production company for a four-part documentary series on the global problem of child marriages
Vulture on that impossible tracking shot in The French Dispatch
InStyle Rita Moreno looks back on her career before hitting the big 9-0

More after the jump including Zendaya, Sondheim and New York City, C'mon C'mon, and the return of Magic Mike... 

Click to read more ...

Wednesday
Dec012021

Almost There: Maggie Smith in "The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel"

by Cláudio Alves

It's time to wish a happy anniversary to The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel. John Madden's unlikely box-office juggernaut was first screened ten years ago on the Sorrento Incontro Internazionale del Cinema. Truth be told, it's not a fantastic flick, adapting a Deborah Moggach novel into a toothless feel-good comedy that reeks of good intentions corroded by colonialist condescension. Where it triumphs, however, is in casting. Madden managed to gather a remarkable ensemble, made up of charismatic British thespians who could deliver great performances with their eyes closed and a hand tied behind their back: Judi Dench! Maggie Smith! Bill Nighy! Penelope Wilton! Tom Wilkinson! And more. 

Indeed, their collective work singlehandedly makes the movie into a middlebrow delight. From that collection of beloved British entertainers, Maggie Smith probably came closest to an Oscar nomination…

Click to read more ...

Tuesday
Nov302021

November. It's a wrap.

Just one month left of 2021. Here's what you might have missed in November... 

A dozen highlights
Stephen Sondheim (1930-2021) Nathaniel has thoughts on his legacy
Ranking Jane Campion Cláudio shares his list from, uh, best to most best
tick...tick...BOOM! Nathaniel is surprised but ecstatic
• Did Judi Dench deserve the Oscar for Notes on a Scandal? Matt thinks so
• The Humans isn't for everyone, but Jason writes about its strange resonance
The Worst Person in the World Chris declares it a best of the year. Yup
Halle Berry in Bruised Eurocheese things she's just fine but the movie is lacking
Through Her Lens Juan Carlos introduces his new series on female directors and the Oscar race from year to year. third episode coming soon
Benedict Cumberbatch Cláudio is slowly becoming a fan
Best Supporting Actor Unusually confusing this year!
Spencer (Con) Spencer (Pro) Nathaniel doesn't like it but Cláudio loves it a lot (especially the costumes)
Ask Nathaniel stopping Category Fraud and other topics
Gratitude November is the time to focus on it

Previous wrap-ups if you're just rejoining us...
Oscar 2020 Wrap | May | June | July | Aug | Sept | Oct

COMING IN DECEMBER
A team experience tribute to Honorary Oscar winner Liv Ullman, the beginning of awards season, new movies like Power of the Dog, West Side Story, Don't Look Up, Nightmare Alley, Encanto and others. Plus more on the International Feature Film race and interviews with Lin-Manuel Miranda and Kathy Bates and others